Ten pressing questions entering Miami Dolphins' OTAs

1. How much does Ryan Tannehill's skill set fit into the new offensive Bill Lazor is building for the Dolphins?

Will Lazor move Tannehill more than Mike Sherman, utilizing his athleticism? Can Tannehill's arm make the horizontal passing game come alive. Is Tannehill finally fixing the deep ball issues that have plagued him since his college days?

Will Lazor move Tannehill more than Mike Sherman, utilizing his athleticism? Can Tannehill's arm make the horizontal passing game come alive. Is Tannehill finally fixing the deep ball issues that have plagued him since his college days?

2. How many of the Dolphins' injured receivers -- Brandon Gibson, Brian Hartline and Armon Binns -- are working with the team instead of rehabbing their knee injuries?

Gibson and Binns are the only receivers who fully tore their ACLs, therefore needing at least nine months of rehab. That means the Dolphins should be easing them back into it action. Especially Gibson, Miami's starting slot receiver, who is eight months into his comeback.

Gibson and Binns are the only receivers who fully tore their ACLs, therefore needing at least nine months of rehab. That means the Dolphins should be easing them back into it action. Especially Gibson, Miami's starting slot receiver, who is eight months into his comeback.

It is finally time to pull back the curtains. On Tuesday, the media gets its first look at the Miami Dolphins 2014 team in action when organized team activities resume for the whole team. The squad might be playing a glorified game of flag football, but this is our first opportunity to see Bill Lazor test drive his new offense and to monitor the changes defensive coordinator Kevin Coyle might make. Here are 10 questions beat writer Omar Kelly will be looking for answers to through OTAs: